United States Department of Agriculture

Fish Go Nuts Over New Feed Ingredient

ARS scientists at the Small Grains and Potato Germplasm Research Unit partnered with Adaptive Bio-Resources, LLC, to develop a nut meal feed ingredient for fish raised for food, such as the rainbow trout fry pictured here. (Stephen Ausmus, D3663-1)

As the aquaculture (fish or shellfish farming) industry grows, so does the need for fish feed that's not dependent on the stagnant supply of fish meal made from captured marine fish protein and oils. With the help of Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists, fish feed made from tree nuts is now an alternative.

Fish physiologist Rick Barrows, who recently retired from the ARS Small Grains and Potato Germplasm Research Unit in Aberdeen, Idaho, partnered with Adaptive Bio-Resources, LLC, principal owner John Hamilton to develop feed ingredients high enough in protein to meet aquaculture feed requirements. Hamilton, whose company is based in Escalon, California, came up with the idea of using nuts that do not meet quality standards required by the California Nut Growers Association. Such nuts are typically chipped, broken, discolored, or irregular in size and thus are not marketable to consumers.

"If pistachios or almonds are too big, too small, or too green, they're not used for human food, but they still have some value," says Barrows, who is stationed in Bozeman, Montana.

Barrows and his colleagues modified the nutritional profile of nut materials to increase protein and fit specifications for aquaculture feeds. They evaluated the nut mixture in three fish feeding studies.

The first study was done in rainbow trout fry, which need a high level of protein right after hatching. Fry fed nut meal performed as well as those fed fish meal. Trout fed a diet containing 5 percent fish meal and 49 to 58 percent nut meal had survival and growth rates similar to trout fed a diet containing 55 percent fish meal.

A second study determined the amount of protein and amino acids that was actually digestible. "The nut meal was highly digestible and palatable," Barrows says. "Fish seemed to find the nut meal very tasty."

A third study showed that nut meal can support high levels of growth in rainbow trout whether it replaces fish meal or soy protein concentrate in the diet. Fish were fed diets in which the protein source (fish meal or soy protein concentrate) was replaced by nut meal at a rate of either 50 percent of 100 percent.

"Fish fed the nut diet grew very quickly," Barrows says.

Findings showed that trout fed the nut meals all had weight gains equivalent to trout fed the fish-meal control, except those fed the partial 50-percent replacement level with almond meal alone instead of with almond and pistachio meal.

Adaptive Bio-Resources has been making the nut meal ingredient for 2 years, according to Hamilton. It's a natural ingredient that's desirable in feed for food animals like fish.

Additional research on the nut meal is being conducted with collaborators at other institutions and at several commercial trout farms, Barrows says.

This study was published in Aquaculture in 2014.—Sandra Avant, ARS Office of Communications.

“Fish Go Nuts Over New Feed Ingredient” was published in the October 2016 issue of AgResearch Magazine.

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